A lot or a little?

The parents' guide to what's in this movie.

He wasn't perfect, but Newton Knight was an independent thinker who decided he was tired of fighting for the Confederacy to protect slave owners and who believed that all men should be free.

Violence

Begins with many scenes of Civil War brutality; soldiers' heads and limbs are blown off, dead bodies litter the battlefield, blood is everywhere, and a teen boy is shot to death. It lets up a little from there, but there are more scenes of wartime violence and other cruelty, as well as the Ku Klux Klan lynching former slaves and Confederates killing two young men. A slave owner approaches a female slave, and it's clear he's about to rape her.

What parents need to know

Parents need to know that Free State of Jones stars Oscar winner Matthew McConaughey as Newton Knight, a real-life former soldier-turned-renegade. It's an intense, violent drama about a Civil War deserter who ended up leading one of the biggest wartime rebellions in U.S. history. Be ready for lots of wartime carnage -- including stomach-churning battle scenes with body parts blown off and blood everywhere -- and other violence and cruelty, including lynching and implied rape. Characters also drink and smoke a little and use language like "damn."

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What's the story?

FREE STATE OF JONES takes place in 1862, in Jones City, Mississippi, where a Confederate soldier named Newton Knight (Matthew McConaughey) finds himself demoralized after witnessing a teen boy's death on a blood-soaked battlefield. Knight starts to question why he's fighting and for whom -- and, frankly, his purpose in a war that, to his eyes, benefits rich plantation owners who want to ensure that they get to keep their slaves. Meanwhile, men like him who have neither slaves nor riches are risking their necks while the slave owners stay home. Money apparently talks, prompting Knight to walk, but the world doesn't look kindly on deserters. So off he goes to hide in the swamps with escaped slaves. Soon Knight develops a strong belief that all men, regardless of race, are created equal, and that the war isn't serving any of them. In no time, he becomes the head of a rebellious group of deserters, local townsmen, and former slaves determined to fight the Confederates who are taking their land and hurting their families. It's a fight that doesn't end even after the South surrenders.

Is it any good?

This intense drama sheds light on a little-known but significant part of U.S. history, but while it starts off strong, it loses its way, packing in too many specifics into a meandering 139 minutes. McConaughey is in top form, very much looking and sounding the part, though he's still prone to relying perhaps too much on gesture, which sometimes give his portrayal the feel of caricature. Gugu Mbatha-Raw brings much grace and gravitas to her smaller role at Knight's wife.

The fascinating story of Free State of Jonesis mostly served well by the script. But there's a caveat: A flash-forward to the mid-20th century is jarring, even though it's still somewhat related to Knight's fight for independence. This is a drama worth seeing, but you can't help longing that the editor had taken a stronger hand so that story bloat didn't weigh the film down.

Newton Knight deserted the army: Was he disloyal and deserving of punishment, or was he an independent-minded man who only wanted to fight for what he believed in? Are both answers possible? How did seeing all the carnage around him affect his mindset about the war and the Confederacy?

Do you think the film portrays a complete and accurate picture of the era it takes place in? Why might filmmakers working from a true story not adhere strictly to the facts? How could you find out more about the actual events and people portrayed in the film?

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